Joe All Alone - Netflix

Editor

Joe Holt is thirteen. When his mum and her unsavoury boyfriend Dean
suddenly announce they're going on holiday, Joe's thrilled at the
prospect of a break from trouble at school and tension at home… until it
becomes clear that while his mum and Dean are heading off for Spain,
Joe's being left behind in their Peckham flat. His mum calls it "a
holiday at home". Dean calls it "a secret", and says Joe needs to keep
out of sight for a week or face some nasty consequences.

Left ‘all alone' with £10 for the electric meter and a fridge half-full
of leftovers, Joe plays X-box, stays up all night (and regrets it),
makes a surprise friend in a girl called Asha who also seems to be
parentless for the week, counts off the days… and discovers a sealed bag
lodged in the lavatory cistern. Inside the bag is £20,000 in used cash.
However, that's only the start of Joe's troubles. When the week's over,
his mum and Dean don't show up and Joe knows life's about to get a whole
lot more difficult…

Type: Scripted

Languages: English

Status: In Development

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: None

Joe All Alone - Joe Pesci - Netflix

Joseph Frank Pesci ( PESH-ee; born February 9, 1943) is an American
actor, comedian and singer. Known for portraying tough, volatile
characters, in a variety of genres, he is best known for his role as
Harry Lime in Home Alone and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, as Leo Getz
in the Lethal Weapon franchise, as Vincent Gambini in My Cousin Vinny
(1992), and for co-starring with Robert De Niro in the Martin Scorsese
films Raging Bull (1980), Goodfellas (1990), and Casino (1995). Pesci
won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as the
psychotic gangster Tommy DeVito (based on Thomas DeSimone) in
Goodfellas; he had been previously nominated for the same award for his
role as Joey LaMotta in Raging Bull. Pesci has starred in a number of
other high-profile films, including Easy Money (1983), Once Upon a Time
in America (1984), Moonwalker (1988), JFK (1991), and A Bronx Tale
(1993). He announced his retirement from acting in 1999, and since then
he has appeared only occasionally in films, including a cameo appearance
in the 2006 spy thriller The Good Shepherd, directed by De Niro, and in
the biographical crime film The Irishman.